The New York City Council has approved a contentious bill to broaden its authority to approve high-level appointments within the mayoral administration.
The vote, approved by a 46-4 vote on Thursday, June 6th, extends the council’s “advice and consent” power to the heads of 20 agencies, including finance, social services, sanitation, parks, health, transportation, and housing.
Advocated by Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, this move supposedly aims to align city governance more closely with the federal model, where top appointments are subject to Senate confirmation.
Before the vote, the speaker said, “This bill is just the start to expand advice and consent and the conversation about its checks and balances.”
Mayor Adams’ intentions regarding vetoing the legislation remain uncertain at present.
Critics label this measure as a power grab that could weaken the mayor’s authority and dilute mayoral accountability.
They argue that the mayor’s role is critical, overseeing essential services like clean water, education of nearly a million students, and emergency responses and that centralizing responsibility in the mayor’s office ensures effective governance.
Mayor Adams’ administration has pointed out that the City Charter, adopted in 1989, already grants the City Council considerable oversight capabilities through control of New York City’s $110 billion budget, land use approvals, and other checks, rendering further controls unnecessary.
The charter explicitly empowers the mayor to appoint deputy mayors and commissioners who lead major municipal agencies, ensuring that the mayor is ultimately accountable for their performance and the city’s overall functioning.
Deputy Mayor for Communications Fabien Levy, in a statement, stated, “While the council continues to focus on rehashing a 140-year-old political battle that’s already been debated, our administration will continue to focus on the working-people of this city who want us to focus on how we can protect public safety, rebuild our economy, and make this city more livable.”
According to detractors, the council’s changes could lead to a more fragmented governance structure, diluting the mayor’s office’s direct accountability.
Currently, the council’s power is less centralized, only convening as a whole twice a month.
The council’s decision is perceived as an extension of members’ power, with some interpreting it as a strategic maneuver to advance their political careers and push their political ideologies.
Highlighting the bill’s issues, Chief Counsel Lisa Zornberg stated on Tuesday, June 4th, “The substance of the bill that the City Council proposed is highly problematic and runs against the grain of what has been systematic in New York City for 140 years.”
Zornberg added, “I’m just speaking to New Yorkers now. What is happening in the City Council in this proposed bill is deeply misguided…It will lead to gaps in service. It will discourage good people from serving if they have to go through the political charades of hearings.”
The council moved forward with the decision to expand its powers, which could exacerbate existing challenges and make governance more cumbersome at a time when the city is grappling with serious issues like crime and migrant influxes.